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Tomato & Pork Egg Drop Soup

Lately I have been becoming more and more fascinated with Asian Cuisine. I’m not talking about sweet and sour pork and chicken balls either, guys. I’m talking authentic cuisine from the other side of the world. One of my favourite things right now is pho. Broth, beef, rice noodles, bean sprouts and TONS of flavour. Mmmm! I find that these types of Asian soups just have so many different flavours that somehow come together to make magic happen. I love the tastes, the ease, the health benefits, and of course the fact that my boyfriend is begging me to make more soups like this helps too! I always like to appease the non paleo palettes as much as possible.

Admittedly, I’m pretty inexperienced as far as these things go. I was not raised on different kinds of Asian soups. I was raised on chicken balls, general tso’s and chicken guy ding. I don’t think I even tried wonton soup until I was in my teenage years! But, I am eager to learn, and eager to try new flavours! That is the best part of it. I will be researching much more about this type of cuisine in future, so if you enjoy this type of recipe please, stick around!

The first time I ever heard of egg drop soup was not at a restaurant. It was actually on an episode of the paleo view. Stacy mentioned that she makes her kids egg drop soup for breakfast a lot. That got the wheels turning in my brain, although I couldn’t find an actual recipe for it! So I searched out for the authentic version.

The recipe I’m sharing with you today is my version of this authentic soup. [Tomato Egg Drop Soup.] It features ground pork, tomato, egg, cilantro, green onion and ginger. This soup will make your taste buds SING, I promise you that! My boyfriend tasted it and said “OMG! You need to make stuff like this more often!!!” That, my friends, is a good sign!

Melt coconut oil in a large soup pot over medium heat. Add ground pork in and break up into small pieces while stirring. Cook until almost brown, and then add in the chopped onion. Continue cooking until onion had turned translucent, about 5 minutes.